123
123
Oct 1, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 123
favorite 0
quote 0
and co2 is the manhattan and keeps us alive. the circle of life and attempt to oppress co2 epitomizes the kind of antinature, antiimper prize spirit of the administration. it's the reason we need another supply side of the same kind we had under ronald reagan. >> would you change anything you wrote in the original "wealth and poverty." >> i would have changed quite a lot. i mean, there. all kind of detail that have changed. but i found that do try to change one thing would be to change everything. so, you know, you have in to a bunch of editorial work. instead of changing it, i essentially retained the old book and added 30,000 new words at the beginning and end. and revision of my monetary policy in the middle. and so it's a new book. but it contains the old book. >> and when you say a revights of the monetary politician. what cow do you mean by that? >> well, i fail to make clear in the original version of wealthy and poverty that i believe that stable currency. i don't believe in floating currency. i agree with steve forbes t
and co2 is the manhattan and keeps us alive. the circle of life and attempt to oppress co2 epitomizes the kind of antinature, antiimper prize spirit of the administration. it's the reason we need another supply side of the same kind we had under ronald reagan. >> would you change anything you wrote in the original "wealth and poverty." >> i would have changed quite a lot. i mean, there. all kind of detail that have changed. but i found that do try to change one thing would...
204
204
Oct 29, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 204
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> host: can you give us an example, the network of the u.s., how it exists? >> guest: after the invasion of iraq, one of the major construction or reconstruction quote-on-quote ventures was, you know, commissioned somehow or given somehow to various corporations that are very much in touch or close to or part of the network, for instance, vice president dick cheney, whether it's haliburton, other countries, ended up unfairly taking up the ventures, and, actually, they didn't do a good job at all as a virtue of the results we saw years later. they ended on scandals, and other kinds of such networks. if you'd like to look at a much bigger scale, the entire $700 billion to $800 billion bailout is a quote-on-quote state business network that operates allowing our system to bail out people who caused a problem under legal pretense. the issue is in countries like syria, money is smaller, and the checks and balances whether it's the media or the democratic process, which is absent, and other civil society associations and power centers is completely absent so the pr
. >> host: can you give us an example, the network of the u.s., how it exists? >> guest: after the invasion of iraq, one of the major construction or reconstruction quote-on-quote ventures was, you know, commissioned somehow or given somehow to various corporations that are very much in touch or close to or part of the network, for instance, vice president dick cheney, whether it's haliburton, other countries, ended up unfairly taking up the ventures, and, actually, they didn't do a...
121
121
Oct 8, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
look at the price of google versus a productivity change a get from using google. so what do you want? you want talent of people to be driven out of their minds trying to keep up with other talented people who have taken the risk and gotten successful. and what you see in 2000 is that i had a friend that made a whole bunch of money with some crazy internet started. i can't bear the idea that i'm working at bain make a lot of money and there's a guy out there that made more money. i've got to quit and take the risk to try to get even more. and so i think investors in the same way are driven to take more risk and underwrite the kind of risk that produces those breakthroughs, they're looking for the cure for cancer as opposed to say i'm going to buy aaa bonds or government guaranteed debt that will pay me a modest income from that investment, but i'm not taking any where near the risk because the government will take 50% or 75% of it away. so why should i? if it's a matter of that gets passed onto the customer, then it just raises prices and customers as i don't want
look at the price of google versus a productivity change a get from using google. so what do you want? you want talent of people to be driven out of their minds trying to keep up with other talented people who have taken the risk and gotten successful. and what you see in 2000 is that i had a friend that made a whole bunch of money with some crazy internet started. i can't bear the idea that i'm working at bain make a lot of money and there's a guy out there that made more money. i've got to...
101
101
Oct 14, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
she had become used to them over the months. she who had once lived in the best hotels and finest houses like a queen did not flinch at mere rats. at the door there were dozens of strangers; prison officials, journalists, onlookers jostling to catch sight of her. she wondered who they all were. all these people, she whispered to the sister, as if they were best friends from the theater, peeking out through a gap in the curtain. what a success. whoever they were, they were her audience. and she played her role to perfection. she let herself be led to a black car with its windows drawn, blinds drawn, but she would not be hustled or hurried. the cortege of five identical cars sped rapidly through the still streets, losing the gawkers and journalists who tried to follow. the procession went to the muddy fields that were used for drill practice by the cavalry. it was an apt choice. she always favored military men. the bleak autumn light of the coming dawn illuminated the somber scene. there was a firing squad of 12 from the fourth re
she had become used to them over the months. she who had once lived in the best hotels and finest houses like a queen did not flinch at mere rats. at the door there were dozens of strangers; prison officials, journalists, onlookers jostling to catch sight of her. she wondered who they all were. all these people, she whispered to the sister, as if they were best friends from the theater, peeking out through a gap in the curtain. what a success. whoever they were, they were her audience. and she...
119
119
Oct 15, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
want to see that happen for them. >> host: we have been talking with reyna grande, "the dance between us": a memoir," and you're watching booktv on c-span2. biographer hatty recalls the family inharns resulting in $100 million translating to $2.5 billion today. dubbed the witch of wall street for the tough demeanor and frugal lifestyle, she made fortunes going against the popular thinking of investors. this is about a half hour. >> about five years ago, a friend suggested that i write about hatty green, and i said who? [laughter] she then told me about her, how she was a financial genius, how she, at the time that she livedded was called "the witch of wall street." i started to read about her, and i thought she was interesting, but finance and wall street, and then it was 2008, and everything changed. the stock market collapsed. real estate prices plunged. we were in a financial panic. i started thinking some more about hetty green, and how she had ser viewfed several financial -- survived several financial crisis in her day. one of the things i look for in someone i'm writing about is d
want to see that happen for them. >> host: we have been talking with reyna grande, "the dance between us": a memoir," and you're watching booktv on c-span2. biographer hatty recalls the family inharns resulting in $100 million translating to $2.5 billion today. dubbed the witch of wall street for the tough demeanor and frugal lifestyle, she made fortunes going against the popular thinking of investors. this is about a half hour. >> about five years ago, a friend...
130
130
Oct 27, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 130
favorite 0
quote 0
instruments should assist us. creating jobs and boosting socially inclusive growth remains our utmost priority in ultimate goal. the commitments made under the compact for growth and jobs cannot wait. they must be followed by decisive action and translated into concrete results. it's particularly urgent for the implementation of the 120 billion package we agreed in june for progress on the senior market issues and on our e.u. 2020 goals. it is also urgent for supporting social inclusion, developments, developing competitiveness of our industries and harnessing the potential of international trade. in the meanwhile, we will discuss the november the most annual financial framework at the european council. we need to grow the e.u. budget although it represents only 1% of european gdp as an investment budget is a huge impact on growth. of course, restoring confidence in the year is out as a key part of bringing back internal demand and growth. unless we can now witness the first results of our cumulative actions. i ma
instruments should assist us. creating jobs and boosting socially inclusive growth remains our utmost priority in ultimate goal. the commitments made under the compact for growth and jobs cannot wait. they must be followed by decisive action and translated into concrete results. it's particularly urgent for the implementation of the 120 billion package we agreed in june for progress on the senior market issues and on our e.u. 2020 goals. it is also urgent for supporting social inclusion,...
252
252
Oct 8, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 252
favorite 0
quote 0
marketers will now use voter registration lists. it will lose money. i think you can also help with absentee ballots could be. very sophisticated. a very close assembly election. you could vote per absentee. there will send an absentee ballot even if you're not say. you will always vote absentee. well, that list is public. in one very close to a legislative election when candid supporters were very clever. the listeners of p-vlic, so they went and get the list and discovered which belong to a certain local party. the only do this for that political party. they fill the new voter registration cards and sentiment to the office for the elections. the affirmation of the car was identical to that on the card in the p-vlic record except the signature was an eligible scroll on the application. so this registration replace the original registration and the recoe fs. then the absentee clollot comes in and the $7 an hour minimum wage temporary. >> was selected this and make sure that the ballot as a pet system well, gee, this is a signatamere that does not come
marketers will now use voter registration lists. it will lose money. i think you can also help with absentee ballots could be. very sophisticated. a very close assembly election. you could vote per absentee. there will send an absentee ballot even if you're not say. you will always vote absentee. well, that list is public. in one very close to a legislative election when candid supporters were very clever. the listeners of p-vlic, so they went and get the list and discovered which belong to a...
160
160
Oct 6, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 160
favorite 0
quote 0
he purchased his own freedom, secured his family's future, he uses his literacy to write free passes and free papers for other slaves, he contributed to the raising of funds for slaves in dire need for a purchase from their masters. it was in 1809 that james madison took the oath of office as fourth president promising to protect and defend the constitution that he helped found. it was 200 years later that we all watched the 44th president take that same oath. it took 200 years, a shamefully long time, but we did progress from the only allowable role for a black man in the white house to be a liveried footman like paul jennings to the first african-american president and his family making their home in that historic structure. [applause] >> president barack obama would be the first to acknowledge that is rapidly rising star was hitched to paul jennings and to untold number of other african americans whose stories may never be known but who like jennings overcame a barrage of obstacles to rise. it has been said there is nothing truly new in this world but the history that we have yet
he purchased his own freedom, secured his family's future, he uses his literacy to write free passes and free papers for other slaves, he contributed to the raising of funds for slaves in dire need for a purchase from their masters. it was in 1809 that james madison took the oath of office as fourth president promising to protect and defend the constitution that he helped found. it was 200 years later that we all watched the 44th president take that same oath. it took 200 years, a shamefully...
128
128
Oct 31, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
toss trying to thank you for posting this and joining us today. one year ago republicans, democrats and independents honored me with their vote and sent me to washington to be there independent voice. i have worked hard to keep that promise and here's what i've done. cut metal -- taxes on middle-class families and small businesses that create jobs, and over burdensome regulations on our farmers. make sure we keep our promise to seniors on medicare, as well as make sure we support our military and support the niagara falls -- also have to make sure we balanced the budget the right way. i've been so blessed to live the american dream. just like my mom and dad by starlight together in a trailer in the shadows of the steel plant. i promise to continue to be strong independent voice and a fighter to make sure everyone in this great country has the same shot i take it that's my commitment to you. collins: well, good evening. i'm chris collins. i'm running for congress to do my part to help restore the promise of the american dream for our children and o
toss trying to thank you for posting this and joining us today. one year ago republicans, democrats and independents honored me with their vote and sent me to washington to be there independent voice. i have worked hard to keep that promise and here's what i've done. cut metal -- taxes on middle-class families and small businesses that create jobs, and over burdensome regulations on our farmers. make sure we keep our promise to seniors on medicare, as well as make sure we support our military...
115
115
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
he used to write spy novels and had been a spy. elliot richardson from investigative side of things and a few more, relatively minor figures. the president's secretary, rosemary woods, who like fred larue lived in watergate. a great players haed their homes are. mitch shells lived there. it wasn't just the headquarters there to be burgled. >> thomas mallon, we interviewed and spent time with david and julie nixon ice hen hour at the national book festival. do they feature in the watergate novel? >> they do come and go. julie nixon was valiant defender of her father and david eisenhower of his father-in-law during the scandal. julie nixon eisenhower wrote a very good book about her mother. her mower one of the least known i think of the first lady's we've had in modern times. mrs. nixon, very private person, never heard from again after the nixons left the white house for call top. she never did interviews. she never wrote her own memoirs. mrs. nixon was somebody i tried to bring to life in the book. >> you written several historica
he used to write spy novels and had been a spy. elliot richardson from investigative side of things and a few more, relatively minor figures. the president's secretary, rosemary woods, who like fred larue lived in watergate. a great players haed their homes are. mitch shells lived there. it wasn't just the headquarters there to be burgled. >> thomas mallon, we interviewed and spent time with david and julie nixon ice hen hour at the national book festival. do they feature in the watergate...
203
203
Oct 14, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 203
favorite 0
quote 0
like us. the liberated women are liberated women when they think, when they are empowered and they can be practicing muslims and liberated women. we have to reassess our perception of who is free, and how they are free. having started by this and this, we tried to have a critical discussion and to promote the rights of women, but i completely agree this should be done. and it also should be done in the way we deal with the religious scripture sources. i allocated one chapter on women and sing with two problems, reduction of the text little understanding of projection of cultural on the text so the cultural understanding and went to do with this. it's a critical challenge that we have here. >> i spend about 90 minutes before you got here checking out various things in the book. page 81, 131, you seem to say that there's no way democracy can take root in the middle east. this is the palestinian problem is solved. my question is does that mean it will be israel's fault if democracy fails in affai
like us. the liberated women are liberated women when they think, when they are empowered and they can be practicing muslims and liberated women. we have to reassess our perception of who is free, and how they are free. having started by this and this, we tried to have a critical discussion and to promote the rights of women, but i completely agree this should be done. and it also should be done in the way we deal with the religious scripture sources. i allocated one chapter on women and sing...
142
142
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 142
favorite 0
quote 0
technologies available to us. it was just making the point that if you ask about -- look at history through aviation, you would say history has not changed much in the last 60 years. we still fly at exactly the same speed. on airliners that, if anything, are less comfortable than they were then. if you look at the speed of communication, and the declining cost of communication, that is a totally different world. from the world when the first jetliners were developed. and in that sense, yes, it looks like history has speeded up. but i'm going to be flying to england next week, and i think i'm going to have the sense, as i fly there that history is moving very slowly indeed. >> john gaddis is the author of this book "george kennan: an american life." he joioioi@é
technologies available to us. it was just making the point that if you ask about -- look at history through aviation, you would say history has not changed much in the last 60 years. we still fly at exactly the same speed. on airliners that, if anything, are less comfortable than they were then. if you look at the speed of communication, and the declining cost of communication, that is a totally different world. from the world when the first jetliners were developed. and in that sense, yes, it...
136
136
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 136
favorite 0
quote 1
this brings us around to why we're here today. it came from reading great books of russian literature, not in the soviet period. there were not that many, yet, in this period about the soviet era, but the great literature, the great literary classics of 19th century russia which one of the first trained experts in the american foreign service was able to read in the original, his russian was better than that of many russians themselves, they wiewld often say. he used his time as a young man training in the foreign service to study the culture of 19th century russia, to study through the literature of 19th century and very early pre-revolutionary pre-20th century russia and draw certain conclusions about russian national character, russian culture from that. who were the authors that he read? well, they are the obvious suspects. certainly, -- someone else who was most influential, who you might have thought least probable in russian literary heros, and this is chekov. it's very interesting when george kennan gave the first academic
this brings us around to why we're here today. it came from reading great books of russian literature, not in the soviet period. there were not that many, yet, in this period about the soviet era, but the great literature, the great literary classics of 19th century russia which one of the first trained experts in the american foreign service was able to read in the original, his russian was better than that of many russians themselves, they wiewld often say. he used his time as a young man...
123
123
Oct 27, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 123
favorite 0
quote 0
the japanese are the closest behind us and we set about to do as congress has directed us to implement the regulatory regime. regulators are working together extremely well. it's a huge component of our job to try to coordinate and collaborate to the greatest extent possible, understanding we have different underlying legal regimes in different underlying processes. to give you specific examples, chairman gensler from the cftc and i have cohosted to very detailed working sessions with principal regulators of derivatives markets around the world in the past year. all have our next session in early november. we're trying to work through the details about a regulatory regime looks like in comparison to haitian government says well. our goal continues to be to try to create as collaborative and regulatory regime as we can possibly can understanding that we won't be able to be identical. the goal is obviously to not have transactions go to the jurisdiction with the lowest standards. nobody wants to see that happen. the goal is also to not have multilateral institutions, multinational instit
the japanese are the closest behind us and we set about to do as congress has directed us to implement the regulatory regime. regulators are working together extremely well. it's a huge component of our job to try to coordinate and collaborate to the greatest extent possible, understanding we have different underlying legal regimes in different underlying processes. to give you specific examples, chairman gensler from the cftc and i have cohosted to very detailed working sessions with principal...
131
131
Oct 18, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
it hasn't affected us. i think flagrant violations you can identify. >> sounds like three quarters still at least. >> at least. >> just going back, the paper that you gave us has a section on it, titled "vicars, volcker under the ghost of glass steagall. i want us to be clear of your view of this because going back to the question asked, there is some confusion i think or misunderstanding about this. you said in this paper that the approaches of vicars and linnen appear close to the form of glass steagall restrictions in the u.s. which broke down over time and that made a precautionary lesson. hearing you describe your own proposal, to me that sounds more like a glass steagall two type proposal because it's proposing a complete separation between two sets of activities, rather than a ring fence within the same company. so who is closer to glass steagall two? is it you or vickers? >> they both have relevance. i said that because it would allow more functions in the overall organization than my rule. but you'
it hasn't affected us. i think flagrant violations you can identify. >> sounds like three quarters still at least. >> at least. >> just going back, the paper that you gave us has a section on it, titled "vicars, volcker under the ghost of glass steagall. i want us to be clear of your view of this because going back to the question asked, there is some confusion i think or misunderstanding about this. you said in this paper that the approaches of vicars and linnen appear...
48
48
Oct 19, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
and they're used for surveillance, used for intelligence gathering and as you note, they are also used for strikes. i think with the new technology, we have to review the rules of engagement. we haven't yet with the new technology. >> moderator: thank you very much for that 0 religiousing followup. so far we have worked through jobs, health care, and middle east policy. it if there is to be any real movement in congress in the area in needs to be some form of bipartisan in congress. something that according to many voters around the state is a tall order. >> people on both ends of the issues republicans democrats, conservatives, liberals need come together. stop fights. >> i don't feel that either party has been productive in recent years. and i would like to see whoever is elected make some effort to improve relations between members of the two parties. >> >> they need to find comprise. it's time we find comprise. we aren't going get anything done if we keep fights. >> moderator: with that, we wonder from each candidate this, can you name and describe one policy position on the part o
and they're used for surveillance, used for intelligence gathering and as you note, they are also used for strikes. i think with the new technology, we have to review the rules of engagement. we haven't yet with the new technology. >> moderator: thank you very much for that 0 religiousing followup. so far we have worked through jobs, health care, and middle east policy. it if there is to be any real movement in congress in the area in needs to be some form of bipartisan in congress....
130
130
Oct 10, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 130
favorite 0
quote 0
all of us. those of us selected and those of you in this room, our job is to make sure these kids here have the same -- look happy. we want to make sure these kids are the same opportunity we having to do that come in chinese we need an economy growing and creating opportunities for all of our citizens. god bless you. keep up the great work and god bless america. [applause] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] stimac [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> why am i here? [laughter] i am not a politician. everybody knows that. so don't expect me to use the language the washington insider. 37 years in the navy and only one in washington. and now i am an academic. the centerpiece of my life was the vietnam war. i was there the day it start
all of us. those of us selected and those of you in this room, our job is to make sure these kids here have the same -- look happy. we want to make sure these kids are the same opportunity we having to do that come in chinese we need an economy growing and creating opportunities for all of our citizens. god bless you. keep up the great work and god bless america. [applause] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible...
92
92
Oct 26, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
please kick us off. >> thank you, arts. it's a pleasure to be here at this annual event. i will try not to put you too much into a gloomy mood. if we are going to discuss the business of trying to predict what possibly is the next financial crisis, think it's important to discuss the changing age or of this crisis. 30 years ago, we had what we now affectionately called the traditional type of crisis only happening in the emerging markets and the contagion of this crisis was regional. latin america got hit but your financial exit in southeast asia were relatively safe. but in late 1995, sorry, and early 1995, the world as we knew it changed. mexico crashed and something very strange happened. within three days markets in hong kong, india, hungary, and pole and crashed. we weren't expecting this and we most certainly did not understand what mechanism was in place that was causing world emerging markets to crash just because mexico crashed. and you know, when economists can't understand something they give it a special name. w
please kick us off. >> thank you, arts. it's a pleasure to be here at this annual event. i will try not to put you too much into a gloomy mood. if we are going to discuss the business of trying to predict what possibly is the next financial crisis, think it's important to discuss the changing age or of this crisis. 30 years ago, we had what we now affectionately called the traditional type of crisis only happening in the emerging markets and the contagion of this crisis was regional....
80
80
Oct 30, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
that's something our enemies and adversaries can use against us. there was disclosure five years ago of a very responsibly run and a very effective program going after the terrorist finances called the swift program. once that got out that diminished our ability to attract the financing of terrorists and that is a serious damage to our operations and to our sources. much has been made over the last ten, 11 years to have human intelligence, and human intelligence is intelligence officials going out and developing sources. human beings that are going to get inside the organization we have and tell you what they are doing. we allow that to pass after the fall of the berlin wall and after 9/11 it's clear we didn't have an insight into what they were doing because we didn't have that intelligence. so we need to develop sources and the government has done a good job in the last years of doing that and that is why we see them getting taken off the battlefield in a pretty impressive rate because we have people inside telling us what they are doing but when
that's something our enemies and adversaries can use against us. there was disclosure five years ago of a very responsibly run and a very effective program going after the terrorist finances called the swift program. once that got out that diminished our ability to attract the financing of terrorists and that is a serious damage to our operations and to our sources. much has been made over the last ten, 11 years to have human intelligence, and human intelligence is intelligence officials going...
231
231
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 231
favorite 0
quote 0
using water to generate electricity is a regular use of water. in fact half our nation's water supply goes to doing that. is it a good idea with pollution. it's depends on how it set up. if the water is here and -- the idea you pollute the groundwater is political. it and all of the processes are seen by government regulators. they don't allow people to drill wells without any oversight. it's a process that's been going on. it's only recently in the news in the last years. we've been doing it for four 70 years. it's this is not a new technology. we have gotten better tat. glild add the point that fracking it created a -- so the recycling rink for water from fluids has escalading thatmatically. will are companies looking at no water fracking they use air instead of water. the company already have a reason to recycling which is to say it's bringing in new form of water and having to treat their water disposing of and hazard use waste. i think you're seeing -- you can't point it and sayings if a bad use of water. in a sense it doesn't exist in evolv
using water to generate electricity is a regular use of water. in fact half our nation's water supply goes to doing that. is it a good idea with pollution. it's depends on how it set up. if the water is here and -- the idea you pollute the groundwater is political. it and all of the processes are seen by government regulators. they don't allow people to drill wells without any oversight. it's a process that's been going on. it's only recently in the news in the last years. we've been doing it...
224
224
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 224
favorite 0
quote 0
one refracta well, uses the same water used in a golf course in three weeks. and with that energy come were producing a lot more natural gas was creating a tremendous amount of jobs. so it goes back to what you're talking about. the trade-off is not either/or. it's here are all the other factors. you have a question you mention of corn ethanol that it creates natures oxide. our other ethanol screwed from other products? details are great natures oxide? >> i don't know about that. i do know there are other biofuels which i promise. and one of them ironically enough is the janata say modified algae, which is able to take carbon dioxide and converted into long chain fatty acid, which is diesel, bio diesel. some definitely don't lump all biofuels together because they are not all the same. converting corn to ethanol seems to be a particularly bad idea, but there's other types of biofuels, which may have potential. >> natures oxide is the least of the problems. when you look at the new troupe loading causing dead zones, oceanic incense, pesticide loading and waterw
one refracta well, uses the same water used in a golf course in three weeks. and with that energy come were producing a lot more natural gas was creating a tremendous amount of jobs. so it goes back to what you're talking about. the trade-off is not either/or. it's here are all the other factors. you have a question you mention of corn ethanol that it creates natures oxide. our other ethanol screwed from other products? details are great natures oxide? >> i don't know about that. i do...
180
180
Oct 13, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 180
favorite 0
quote 0
here is why they want to take them away, to protect us. that's right, to protect us. nice of them, isn't it? here you were thinking you could protect yourself. according to last count about 30,000 people die annually in gun related accidents. that number, 30,000 annually in gun related incidents. about 45,000 die in car crashes. 37,005 from poisoning, 20,000 a year die from unintentional falls. the framers of the constitution to say that guns are dangerous. they are, especially to the invaders and despot's and thieves, but they were necessary. that is what they said. that is what liberals it the most what the second amendment, it's necessary. it reinforces the constitutional motion of a free and sovereign people. citizens of the country, a well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. pretty much every single word in that sentence is what gives liberals the heebie-jeebies. that is why they hated. of the other hand 20,000 people die every year from unintentional falls. maybe
here is why they want to take them away, to protect us. that's right, to protect us. nice of them, isn't it? here you were thinking you could protect yourself. according to last count about 30,000 people die annually in gun related accidents. that number, 30,000 annually in gun related incidents. about 45,000 die in car crashes. 37,005 from poisoning, 20,000 a year die from unintentional falls. the framers of the constitution to say that guns are dangerous. they are, especially to the invaders...
189
189
Oct 31, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 189
favorite 0
quote 0
he used the blog, facebook, his friends, he used crowd funding and use it's an interesting space. it's not just about are you going sell a million units? yes, you're going to do some of the stuff. i think square probably gets it made in china. but there are plenty of products and plenty of spaces to be able to create products locally that people want locally. >> the point is also that a lot of barriers entrepreneurship as we've been hearing is getting started. and even if you can't, you know, keep using the tools, if you do have to make a million, that's fibro. we know how to make a million widgets, right? and what's fascinating about this, the barriers to entrepreneurship, you know, not just in the digital realm, but in the physical realm are going away. all right. what would you say to, you know, a lot of manufacturing jobs have gone away and a lot of skilled labor, you know, people are out of job talk about retraining. but it seems to me, if you have an idea, you can -- . >> we talk about this in music how the democratization of the music industry is actually enabled kind of a
he used the blog, facebook, his friends, he used crowd funding and use it's an interesting space. it's not just about are you going sell a million units? yes, you're going to do some of the stuff. i think square probably gets it made in china. but there are plenty of products and plenty of spaces to be able to create products locally that people want locally. >> the point is also that a lot of barriers entrepreneurship as we've been hearing is getting started. and even if you can't, you...
172
172
Oct 6, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 172
favorite 0
quote 0
welcome and thank you for joining us here. my name is richard fontaine the president for the center of new american security. it's a pleasure to welcome you to celebrate publication of the look of the revenge of geography with the map tells us about conflicts and the state. i've heard it said before that you honor agreed author not by reading his books but by buying them. you will be happy to know books can be sold after the conversation on the stage in this room. bob kaplan's work is well known to many in the audience he's been a fellow at cnas and a correspondent for atlantic for about a quarter of the century and is currently the chief geopolitical analyst. i became acquainted with his riding through the book arabist which is a group of westerners living and working in the middle east. since that book, the title of the work, the coming anarchy, imperial grounds have provoked intense debate in policy circles. the most recent book monsoon and the future of american power has become required reading by those that interest in t
welcome and thank you for joining us here. my name is richard fontaine the president for the center of new american security. it's a pleasure to welcome you to celebrate publication of the look of the revenge of geography with the map tells us about conflicts and the state. i've heard it said before that you honor agreed author not by reading his books but by buying them. you will be happy to know books can be sold after the conversation on the stage in this room. bob kaplan's work is well...
95
95
Oct 31, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
we've made clear we will use the veto as i've used it before, so let me ask him, will you use the vie toe -- veto. >> order. order. i won't be using the veto, and i will ask the prime minister, about the tenth time i've asked him to respect parliamentary procedure in this matter. >> thank you, mr. speaker. the -- [inaudible] region faces many challenge, particularly with the announcement of job losses at ford last week. will my right honorable friend agree with me that the case for a city deal for south hampton and portsmouth is particularly compelling? >> i do think it is particularly compelling that we make sure south hampton has a city deal. i understand they are on the list. obviously, the news from ford was very disappointing. it was black spot in otherwise a very, very strong performance by the british automotive industry, and i know the business secretary will be working very closely with the city council to do everything we can to help people find jobs. >> mr. andrew miller. >> mr. speaker, might i ask a very straightforward question that should command a straightforward answe
we've made clear we will use the veto as i've used it before, so let me ask him, will you use the vie toe -- veto. >> order. order. i won't be using the veto, and i will ask the prime minister, about the tenth time i've asked him to respect parliamentary procedure in this matter. >> thank you, mr. speaker. the -- [inaudible] region faces many challenge, particularly with the announcement of job losses at ford last week. will my right honorable friend agree with me that the case for...
106
106
Oct 20, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 0
send us an e-mail. or tweet us. >> i want t or tweet us. >> i want to talk to you about my book, strom thurman's america, and i want to tell you mystrom thurman story. o research in south carolina and people ask you what you're writing and you tell them,strom thurmond this, say, let me tell you my story atstrom their pond. everybody has a great story rmond, the time- they saw him do something crazy or that kind of thing. rmond story aboutstrom t-- bulletins in -- it's late july in 1992 and i'm on a flight from washington, dc to charlotte, north carolina. and i've been an intend that summer up on capitol hill. and one of my regrets of the su and ier was that i had never rmond.rom t-- all my fellow interns said you got to seestrom thurmond. he is such an uw sual appearance about him. i didn't know that they meant, really, about that. but i had my suspicions. so i'm on the flight and i look ahead in front of me and i see a man who has got these kind of orange colored hair, practically, and first generation
send us an e-mail. or tweet us. >> i want t or tweet us. >> i want to talk to you about my book, strom thurman's america, and i want to tell you mystrom thurman story. o research in south carolina and people ask you what you're writing and you tell them,strom thurmond this, say, let me tell you my story atstrom their pond. everybody has a great story rmond, the time- they saw him do something crazy or that kind of thing. rmond story aboutstrom t-- bulletins in -- it's late july in...
140
140
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 140
favorite 0
quote 0
i think that was another point of end counter between us. end -- encounter between us. but she chose northern new mexico, i think, not to be right next door to her family, you know? is but close enough so that we could visit often. and also because northern new mexico, there's this place called the espanol lavallee which runs along highway 5 which ultimately comes out of santa fe and, taos. and that place in northern new mexico has the highest rate of
i think that was another point of end counter between us. end -- encounter between us. but she chose northern new mexico, i think, not to be right next door to her family, you know? is but close enough so that we could visit often. and also because northern new mexico, there's this place called the espanol lavallee which runs along highway 5 which ultimately comes out of santa fe and, taos. and that place in northern new mexico has the highest rate of
157
157
Oct 10, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 157
favorite 0
quote 0
that law to assist us? [applause] >> well, one of the things you are pointing to is the way in which women's health and reproductive health are framed as different from the rest of health care. and that is it is disconcerting that event from advocates of women's health care access, we hear so much that should be important to women and women should vote on this woman should be concerned about this. but this is an issue important to an entire family. both partners should be thinking about how they are preventing pregnancy and how they are taking those precautions. and i imagine many of the women -- i'm sorry, many of the men in this term care about the women's in their lives and care about them having access to the health health care that they need. so that is one step we need to take, to make this about broader health care and not be treated unique and different and singled out for different types of legislative action. clap knock >> there is so much on the book now that looks at women came years that has be
that law to assist us? [applause] >> well, one of the things you are pointing to is the way in which women's health and reproductive health are framed as different from the rest of health care. and that is it is disconcerting that event from advocates of women's health care access, we hear so much that should be important to women and women should vote on this woman should be concerned about this. but this is an issue important to an entire family. both partners should be thinking about...
147
147
Oct 2, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 147
favorite 0
quote 0
tom writes in the great book, it used to be us. egg gracious used to be us. denying massive amounts of people the rights used to be us. not being concerned about the poor used to be us. and so i would say looking historically there have been periods we with have been on different measures better than we are now. there are measures where we have been worse. it's a mixed picture i would say. the real question we're addressing. the real question, i think the thing tom talk abouts are important. i am for the pep talk. i agree with the pep talk. but in terms of measuring our influence, again, i think that jump on the phrase that john had which is what he said we don't exercise the author if we did and i think the an is of course we never actually did. we spent the cold war dealing with the soviet union that wielded a certain amount of influence. had troops controlled half of europe. i think our situation is unquestionably better now than it was during that period. in terms of strategic situation in terms of wielding over influence. and i think the real way to look
tom writes in the great book, it used to be us. egg gracious used to be us. denying massive amounts of people the rights used to be us. not being concerned about the poor used to be us. and so i would say looking historically there have been periods we with have been on different measures better than we are now. there are measures where we have been worse. it's a mixed picture i would say. the real question we're addressing. the real question, i think the thing tom talk abouts are important. i...
104
104
Oct 12, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 104
favorite 0
quote 0
there's just not that many of us. [laughter] i also, you know, i appreciate haim's comments that we are the a-team of north africa experts and in that same sort of, you know, reference, i think that dr. zoubir has to be mr. t. so i'm going to do something, i think, a little bit unusual for a conference, and what i'd like to do is game out some scenarios for where i think north africa might be heading. i don't intend them to be definitive or exhaustive, i hope they're speculative and provocative and they can serve as fuel for discussion. um, before we do that, though, you know, it's important to establish a base case. where do we think these countries in north africa are. and then from there we can project out wards to where we think they might be going, what are their trajectories. and then lastly i'd like to propose some alternate trajectories, the reasonable trajectories that analysts think these countries are on, what would be some of the circumstances tald throw them off and present us with an alternate scenario,
there's just not that many of us. [laughter] i also, you know, i appreciate haim's comments that we are the a-team of north africa experts and in that same sort of, you know, reference, i think that dr. zoubir has to be mr. t. so i'm going to do something, i think, a little bit unusual for a conference, and what i'd like to do is game out some scenarios for where i think north africa might be heading. i don't intend them to be definitive or exhaustive, i hope they're speculative and provocative...
67
67
Oct 17, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
, made us, you know, really, really weak. we couldn't fight the regime because we were trying to survive, and that happened in cuba. that happened in iran in the 1980s, and you are doing it again in iran. is there any reason for that? >> one has to be absolutely clear. first of all what the purpose of sanctions are, squeezing the regime to try to topple it is one possible purpose. getting the regime -- inducing the regime to make concessions or change a policy is an entire different purpose. part of the problem with the iranian sanctions is we have people who believe each of those things are objectives and they work against each other. if you go off the sanctions were going to squeeze the regime to the point that it would fall, that means keep them in, be flexible, don't concede anything. if you use them as leverage to get change in iranian policy in the nuclear matter, that's different and argues for flexibility. i'm aware of no instance in which sanctions could be credited with toppling a regime. if you use them it get poli
, made us, you know, really, really weak. we couldn't fight the regime because we were trying to survive, and that happened in cuba. that happened in iran in the 1980s, and you are doing it again in iran. is there any reason for that? >> one has to be absolutely clear. first of all what the purpose of sanctions are, squeezing the regime to try to topple it is one possible purpose. getting the regime -- inducing the regime to make concessions or change a policy is an entire different...
158
158
Oct 9, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 158
favorite 0
quote 0
and don't use the data. so terms of service, for example, need to be simplified. the linkedin terms of service is 7,000 words. you'd have to be a lawyer, you'd have to hire a lawyer to understand it. so most people don't really understand what's going on with their data on the internet, and it's a massive issue. >> i didn't mean to paint you as an outsider. i mean, you've been there since the mid '90s, you had a company, you founded a company. but so maybe you're in better position than most to critique this, but let's move on to your critique of web 2.0. you're compared it to communism, using the phrase a grand utopian movement, you're taken aim as larryless cig, a thought leader in this movement. inherently dangerous to culture and the arts. sounds like you're channeling the recording industry or hollywood. now, we have some lobbyists from the recording industry and hollywood in the audience, fuse corp., nbc, universal and so on. would you agree we need new copyright laws to stop online privacy like sopa?
and don't use the data. so terms of service, for example, need to be simplified. the linkedin terms of service is 7,000 words. you'd have to be a lawyer, you'd have to hire a lawyer to understand it. so most people don't really understand what's going on with their data on the internet, and it's a massive issue. >> i didn't mean to paint you as an outsider. i mean, you've been there since the mid '90s, you had a company, you founded a company. but so maybe you're in better position than...
85
85
Oct 31, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
he used the blog, facebook, his friends, he used crowd funding and use it's an interesting space. it's not just about are you going sell a million units? yes, you're going to do some of the stuff. i think square probably gets it made in china. but there are plenty of products and plenty of spaces to be able to create products locally that people want locally. >> the point is also that a lot of barriers entrepreneurship as we've been hearing is getting started. and even if you can't, you know, keep using the tools, if you do have to make a million, that's fibro. we know how to make a million widgets, right? and what's fascinating about this, the barriers to entrepreneurship, you know, not just in the digital realm, but in the physical realm are going away. all right. what would you say to, you know, a lot of manufacturing jobs have gone away and a lot of skilled labor, you know, people are out of job talk about retraining. but it seems to me, if you have an idea, you can -- . >> we talk about this in music how the democratization of the music industry is actually enabled kind of a
he used the blog, facebook, his friends, he used crowd funding and use it's an interesting space. it's not just about are you going sell a million units? yes, you're going to do some of the stuff. i think square probably gets it made in china. but there are plenty of products and plenty of spaces to be able to create products locally that people want locally. >> the point is also that a lot of barriers entrepreneurship as we've been hearing is getting started. and even if you can't, you...
64
64
Oct 18, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
are used handing? because we have about five minutes i want to get a question. >> when i was saying that the united states doesn't want to engage, actually it is perceived by people of not doing anything, is perceived as doing a favor to the regime. so choosing not to do anything and is actually doing positively support to the regime. this is a perception. >> excuse my english. i just came here. i just have one question. has there been any sectors for sanctions in history? howser also been in a and regime? why did the united states call for sanctions? i'm from iraq with the teen years of sanctions and i think that they empower the regime. it's really, really weak. we are trying to survive and that's happened in cuba, and it's happening iran in the 1980s and you are doing it again in iran. is there any reason for that? >> one has to be absolutely clear first of all with the purpose of sanctions are. you know, squeezing the regime to topple it is one possible purpose. getting the regime to make conceptio
are used handing? because we have about five minutes i want to get a question. >> when i was saying that the united states doesn't want to engage, actually it is perceived by people of not doing anything, is perceived as doing a favor to the regime. so choosing not to do anything and is actually doing positively support to the regime. this is a perception. >> excuse my english. i just came here. i just have one question. has there been any sectors for sanctions in history? howser...
137
137
Oct 7, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
you abandoned us once, but why call us out to san fransisco? my father, you know, i think the book, too, it's been healing for my father. he would -- if they said his name, he left the room. he would not talk about him. this book suddenly, you know, my father's story is out there, and i think it's been good for him. i think this story of forgiveness, this story of the sea, of realizing, you know, when they were fighting this storm at sea, the courage of the -- you know, it's a time gone by. there's still fishermen that go out, but the people, the historical piece, it was a very difficult time. they barely survived when they came home with cod, and they were so hard working, never gave up. the women, you know, would raise their children in a simpler way. they had gardens and so i think for me it's the courage and integrity of the people that we can all learn from. i mean, they worked very hard to survive, and a lot of times the women lost their men, and they still had to carry on, and the government wasn't there to help them, and today, a lot of
you abandoned us once, but why call us out to san fransisco? my father, you know, i think the book, too, it's been healing for my father. he would -- if they said his name, he left the room. he would not talk about him. this book suddenly, you know, my father's story is out there, and i think it's been good for him. i think this story of forgiveness, this story of the sea, of realizing, you know, when they were fighting this storm at sea, the courage of the -- you know, it's a time gone by....
89
89
Oct 9, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
it's using technology. but when you market to sell the things the manufacture in china is the biggest market in the world for us. so we want their economy to be good. they also incidentally so the stores with things people want to buy at low prices. the consumer one of these is the way to the day i want them to keep sending stuff here. without them i couldn't afford it. >> and i just had one very hopeful thing. in the last two years, we've had enormous discoveries of natural gas in this country. we have an energy policy for six or seven years, we will be totally independent of importing any oil or gas in the gas will go into the agent, give out half the carbon pocola does. we want to worry about bloody windfarms and hideous other things. >> i'm glad to see the plans, thank you. >> we've got the gas now. except in new york say you got a governor who's very slow to allow it to be brought out of the ground. just over pennsylvania, they're making money out of it. >> so we've got to close on an optimistic note.
it's using technology. but when you market to sell the things the manufacture in china is the biggest market in the world for us. so we want their economy to be good. they also incidentally so the stores with things people want to buy at low prices. the consumer one of these is the way to the day i want them to keep sending stuff here. without them i couldn't afford it. >> and i just had one very hopeful thing. in the last two years, we've had enormous discoveries of natural gas in this...
95
95
Oct 26, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
the chinese haven't done us a favor yet of telling us who will be in the new leadership. that will be announced on november 8. i think we're all confident we know that the general secretary of the congress party will be xi jinping. will have a pretty good idea of at least four members of the politburo standing committee, and perhaps other members. i think, the important thing here is that china needs to resume the path of aggressive reform in the economic and political area. i think xi jinping is a very, very smart man who understands what china needs to do. a real linkage between economic and political reform in china. these are not unrelated. again, going back to the road report -- world bank report i mentioned, one of the key recommendations is about rule of wall of how important is to economic development in china. that is also historic the first step of most entries an issue. embarking on a path towards democracy. the question is whether xi jinping and the new standing committee will choose to take the aggressive steps that need to be taken on economic and political
the chinese haven't done us a favor yet of telling us who will be in the new leadership. that will be announced on november 8. i think we're all confident we know that the general secretary of the congress party will be xi jinping. will have a pretty good idea of at least four members of the politburo standing committee, and perhaps other members. i think, the important thing here is that china needs to resume the path of aggressive reform in the economic and political area. i think xi jinping...
79
79
Oct 31, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
so zara used technology to become successful, walmart used technology. but you have to have the original genesis of an idea to begin with. and i think that's so important. when you look at zara, they enable, they empower their people. so if someone sees a trend in san francisco, they can jump on it. they don't have to salute the flag and go up corporate headquarters, they can act. and what i think we really need to focus on is diversifying our economy. we certainly need a robust, strong manufacturing basis, but now is the time where we have to diversify. one of the reasons we suffered so greatly is our entire city was tied to one industry, and when that industry ran into trouble, so did the region. and the second thing about technology, these are companies that are capital-efficient and can scale quickly. what used to take decades to create significant amounts of jobs can happen now in a matter of months. >> right. >> so i think it's imperative that the local officials and the universities in the country. it can make such a big impact so quickly. >> this
so zara used technology to become successful, walmart used technology. but you have to have the original genesis of an idea to begin with. and i think that's so important. when you look at zara, they enable, they empower their people. so if someone sees a trend in san francisco, they can jump on it. they don't have to salute the flag and go up corporate headquarters, they can act. and what i think we really need to focus on is diversifying our economy. we certainly need a robust, strong...
343
343
Oct 11, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 343
favorite 0
quote 0
us. that it's been my focus in the first year as well as trying to contribute to a broader dialogue about critical infrastructure and other threats to the nation and we need to keep after that until we do the best we can to protect ourselves. >> to what extent do you think that the recently released capstone concept for joint operations, joint force of 2020 will affect what each service is now doing and is does it change what they were doing under previous c. c. j. o.? c.c. jl. >> i hope it changes a little bit. one of the things that i have tried to tap in is that we are a burning organization. what have we learned over the last 10 years? what capabilities did not exist 10 years ago and certainly didn't exist as exists today and i will name three. one is isr, intelligence surveillance recognizance. some of you know the element most visible in that regard are unmanned aerial platforms. there is aerostat balloons flying all over afghanistan and there are all kinds of intelligence surveilla
us. that it's been my focus in the first year as well as trying to contribute to a broader dialogue about critical infrastructure and other threats to the nation and we need to keep after that until we do the best we can to protect ourselves. >> to what extent do you think that the recently released capstone concept for joint operations, joint force of 2020 will affect what each service is now doing and is does it change what they were doing under previous c. c. j. o.? c.c. jl. >> i...
67
67
Oct 30, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
would never use in my lifetime. but it's pretty amazing and it involves a super majority of the fdic or determining that there is a systemic risk to the financial stability of the united states. super majority of the federal reserve board. these are recommendations made to the secretary of the treasury who then consults with the president of the united states and makes a determination to appoint the fdic has the also consult as well. and if we are dealing with a broker-dealer and the fcc instead of the fdic and if we are dealing with insurance, a large insurance company that would be the federal insurance ce
would never use in my lifetime. but it's pretty amazing and it involves a super majority of the fdic or determining that there is a systemic risk to the financial stability of the united states. super majority of the federal reserve board. these are recommendations made to the secretary of the treasury who then consults with the president of the united states and makes a determination to appoint the fdic has the also consult as well. and if we are dealing with a broker-dealer and the fcc...
118
118
Oct 10, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
for all of us. our job, those of us elected and thous in the room, our job is to ensure the kids here have the same -- look happy -- [laughter] we have to make sure the kids have the same opportunity that we had, and to do that, that means we have to have an economy that's growing, creating opportunities for all of our citizens. god bless you. keep up the great work, and god bless america. [cheers and applause] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] ins [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> here in cleveland, ohio. i'm from the news hour and washington week on pbs, and i welcome you to the first and thw only vice presidential debate between vice president dicki cheney, the republican nominee, and senator john edwards, thek democratic nominee.r these debates are sponsored by the commission on presidential debatesment
for all of us. our job, those of us elected and thous in the room, our job is to ensure the kids here have the same -- look happy -- [laughter] we have to make sure the kids have the same opportunity that we had, and to do that, that means we have to have an economy that's growing, creating opportunities for all of our citizens. god bless you. keep up the great work, and god bless america. [cheers and applause] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations]...
118
118
Oct 19, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
it will cost us $2.6 billion. but the one provision that is just reprehensible is that it robs medicare of 716 william dollars. and when i get to congress, i will fight to make sure those cuts are restored. and third, we are going have bureaucrats in washington d.c. destroying the doctor patient relationship, telling us when we can see doctors, how we can see them. and forth, it will destroy small business because never before in american history have read that if you hired more than 450 people may worked with in 39 hours per week that should be penalized. sinema: the small business does it have been. but it's not practical norbury of the state. o'grady to do is work together to create more affordability for small businesses. businesses between 50 and 200 employees. one thing i do want to point out, i was concerned mr. parker said it's a story repeated over and over in the media and been debunked from the beginning. that is the cuts to medicare. the truth is that the affordable care act cuts out waste, fraud and a
it will cost us $2.6 billion. but the one provision that is just reprehensible is that it robs medicare of 716 william dollars. and when i get to congress, i will fight to make sure those cuts are restored. and third, we are going have bureaucrats in washington d.c. destroying the doctor patient relationship, telling us when we can see doctors, how we can see them. and forth, it will destroy small business because never before in american history have read that if you hired more than 450 people...
91
91
Oct 31, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
we've made clear we will use the veto as i've used it before, so let me ask him, will you use the vie toe -- veto. >> order. order. i won't be using the veto, and i will ask the prime minister, about the tenth time i've asked him to respect parliamentary procedure in this matter. >> thank you, mr. speaker. the -- [inaudible] region faces many challenge, particularly with the announcement of job losses at ford last week. will my right honorable friend agree with me that the case for a city deal for south hampton and portsmouth is particularly compelling? >> i do think it is particularly compelling that we make sure south hampton has a city deal. i understand they are on the list. obviously, the news from ford was very disappointing. it was black spot in otherwise a very, very strong performance by the british automotive industry, and i know the business secretary will be working very closely with the city council to do everything we can to help people find jobs. >> mr. andrew miller. >> mr. speaker, might i ask a very straightforward question that should command a straightforward answe
we've made clear we will use the veto as i've used it before, so let me ask him, will you use the vie toe -- veto. >> order. order. i won't be using the veto, and i will ask the prime minister, about the tenth time i've asked him to respect parliamentary procedure in this matter. >> thank you, mr. speaker. the -- [inaudible] region faces many challenge, particularly with the announcement of job losses at ford last week. will my right honorable friend agree with me that the case for...
100
100
Oct 25, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 1
to us. david, we're honored to have you here. thank you very much. >> well, it's good to be here. you know, every month that the court, there's always a certain amount of grouching in the courtroom. when there's a couple cases on, uninteresting, insignificant, downright boring, always referred to as "the dogs." this is different. we have to cases on the same day next wednesday, and they are anything but insignificant or uninteresting. we've got a good group here to talk about these cases. i was impressed with the briefs that were filed in this case. i think the basic issue is whether there is the fourth amendment putting any limit on the police use of dogs for detection because in the past, at least up until now, the court basically answered that question "no." in the early 80s, the courts said that, you know, at the airport, they can use dogs to sniff your luggage. there's an obvious danger there. the airport's a different situation. in a case eight years ago, the question was could they us
to us. david, we're honored to have you here. thank you very much. >> well, it's good to be here. you know, every month that the court, there's always a certain amount of grouching in the courtroom. when there's a couple cases on, uninteresting, insignificant, downright boring, always referred to as "the dogs." this is different. we have to cases on the same day next wednesday, and they are anything but insignificant or uninteresting. we've got a good group here to talk about...
85
85
Oct 5, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
we are able to do that using small preferences than we have used on the ressa system that we used in the top tier and we had better academic outcomes for our students to read the clause that we admitted and 97 went on to have the highest broadcast rate in the history before or since. so you can do pretty remarkable things. but you can't perform miracles and part of my problem in the report is that there's a certain element of suggesting it's possible or it's a little hard. we had a significant drop in the racial diversity in the part of what was because we were competing in the market and it was pointed out the schools the national markets have more difficulties mntaining racial diversity than those that have more but there was a trade-off there was aware i depart from on some of the conclusions i think one is that it's important to recognize cut we can't underestimate the size of what we are doing now. rick put a slide of the difference between the s.a.t. gap based on class and based on race, and i was pretty surprised i saw that. i went back and i reran the numbers and it's correct
we are able to do that using small preferences than we have used on the ressa system that we used in the top tier and we had better academic outcomes for our students to read the clause that we admitted and 97 went on to have the highest broadcast rate in the history before or since. so you can do pretty remarkable things. but you can't perform miracles and part of my problem in the report is that there's a certain element of suggesting it's possible or it's a little hard. we had a significant...
202
202
Oct 16, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 202
favorite 0
quote 0
he had a beach place that he used right next to one that fidel used. and all he had to do was get close enough to fidel to kill him. the cia recruited this man. he was known in the literature and declassified clliterature am-nash, that was the crypt for this man. he had a number of cia case officers in south america and in europe. he was trained in demolitions in france. he went to an american air base in the south of france. he was taught demolitions and explosives by the agency. and he met in october 1963 with one of the highest level officials of the cia. this man's name was desmond fits girl. dez traveled to europe, met in a safehouse with kubella and fitzgerald told him, i'm robert kennedy's personal representative in this meeting. about a month later the case officer, cia case officer working for desmond fitzgerald was in paris, in the same safe house, meeting the same rolando kublla, november 22, 1963, when they met. and sanchez, who i actually interviewed, retired cia case officer, fluent in spanish, he was meeting with kubella and giving him f
he had a beach place that he used right next to one that fidel used. and all he had to do was get close enough to fidel to kill him. the cia recruited this man. he was known in the literature and declassified clliterature am-nash, that was the crypt for this man. he had a number of cia case officers in south america and in europe. he was trained in demolitions in france. he went to an american air base in the south of france. he was taught demolitions and explosives by the agency. and he met in...
114
114
Oct 15, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 114
favorite 0
quote 0
none of us want that. we've seen people like rupert murdoch, bill o'reilly and michael diverse sin, george w. bush's speech writer, all advocating for sensible policies that would save lives. frank hundreds showed us that 74% of nra members support criminal background checks for all gun sales. hundreds of thousands of americans have signed petitions like the ones on we are better than this.org to demand action. that's we are better than this.org. it is clear, one voice is forming, and a very important of that voice is the legal community. to use its expertise and resources, to protect the good gun laws that are under constant assault by the gun lobby and to hold the gun industry accountable when it places profits over people. in fact, i would go so far as to say that no profession right now has a greater opportunity to prevent gun deaths and injuries than the one that's so well represented in this room today. so how's that for saddling you with some serious responsibility on your shoulders? [laughter] but
none of us want that. we've seen people like rupert murdoch, bill o'reilly and michael diverse sin, george w. bush's speech writer, all advocating for sensible policies that would save lives. frank hundreds showed us that 74% of nra members support criminal background checks for all gun sales. hundreds of thousands of americans have signed petitions like the ones on we are better than this.org to demand action. that's we are better than this.org. it is clear, one voice is forming, and a very...
111
111
Oct 5, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
of us to college. i made it to cornell university. getting there you believe anything can happen you believe in that sort of american dream that anybody who works hard can accomplish great things. so with that dilution in mind, when i was a junior, i was working with young people and tutoring and i was -- you will have to excuse me if i'm out of wrath. i got dropped off in the wrong part of town so i got a cab here quick. it was nine blocks away and i had to run here so youth and politics that is one advantage. i am still a little winded. you know, yo t
of us to college. i made it to cornell university. getting there you believe anything can happen you believe in that sort of american dream that anybody who works hard can accomplish great things. so with that dilution in mind, when i was a junior, i was working with young people and tutoring and i was -- you will have to excuse me if i'm out of wrath. i got dropped off in the wrong part of town so i got a cab here quick. it was nine blocks away and i had to run here so youth and politics that...
185
185
Oct 29, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 185
favorite 0
quote 0
we are glad they are with us. this debate is being saimaa simulcast on a retial partner that would be 770, kklb-am. on and on the stage we have democratic candidate martin heinrich and republican candidate had their wilson and they are to replace john bingaman -- jeff bingaman who is retiring. both candidates have agreed to the debate rules to each candidate will have one minute to make an opening statement later they will have one minute for a closing statement. the candidates will be given one minute to answer each question and then 45 seconds each for the rebuttal. later the candidates will be allowed to ask the other candidate a question which is often very enjoyable. the answers will be limited to one minute and each will have 45 seconds for a rebuttal. martin heinrich won the coin toss and he's been selected to go second with his opening statement. so, heather wilson, please go ahead with your opening statement. wilson: thank you, tom, for hosting this this evening. we have two kids at home, one about to go
we are glad they are with us. this debate is being saimaa simulcast on a retial partner that would be 770, kklb-am. on and on the stage we have democratic candidate martin heinrich and republican candidate had their wilson and they are to replace john bingaman -- jeff bingaman who is retiring. both candidates have agreed to the debate rules to each candidate will have one minute to make an opening statement later they will have one minute for a closing statement. the candidates will be given...
106
106
Oct 24, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 0
just don't tell us the rest of us, senator, that it's not good enough for us. if it's good enough for you, it should be good enough for us. i'm the only one in this race who has a plan to balance the budget, who's willing to put that plan into the debate. senator nelson, you've served on the budget knee for a while -- committee for a while, you've failed to pass a budget. >> moderator: foreign policy now, you can do so in your close, national security including immigration policy. lisette campos, first question now goes to senator nelson for a minute, 15, then connie mack. lisette? >> there are an estimated 11 million undocumented people living in florida. do you support amnesty, creating a pathway to citizenship while these individuals can remain on u.s. soil, or do you believe that that sets a dangerous precedent and is unfair to immigrants who have come to this country legally? >> moderator: a minute, 15, sir. nelson: i'm going to answer that in detail, but i'm first going to say not only has it been a cow pasture for 60 years -- [laughter] why don't we ask
just don't tell us the rest of us, senator, that it's not good enough for us. if it's good enough for you, it should be good enough for us. i'm the only one in this race who has a plan to balance the budget, who's willing to put that plan into the debate. senator nelson, you've served on the budget knee for a while -- committee for a while, you've failed to pass a budget. >> moderator: foreign policy now, you can do so in your close, national security including immigration policy. lisette...